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Alabama’s Tough New Anti-Union Laws—A Boon for Organizing?

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Modern School Donating Member (558 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jan-23-11 02:37 PM
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Alabama’s Tough New Anti-Union Laws—A Boon for Organizing?
Several tough new anti-teacher’s union laws were recently passed in Alabama, in the wake of an ethics investigation of education lobbyist Paul Hubbert. One law bans teachers from serving in the Statehouse. Another bans public employee unions that engage in lobbying from collecting dues through paycheck deductions.

While I oppose the use of members’ dues for lobbying, in fact I oppose lobbying and political action by unions, the laws are clearly unfair as they only target specific members of society. My understanding is that unions which do not lobby can still collect dues through payroll deductions. For those that choose to continue lobbying, the process of dues collection will become much more expensive, time-consuming, and difficult, potentially leading to devastating revenue shortfalls that could even bankrupt the unions.

There is a silver lining on this: Perhaps Alabama’s public employee unions will get out of the politics game, which they cannot win anyway (especially against the bottomless pockets of big business), and go back to the more effective and powerful tactics of organizing, educating and agitating their members and the communities that support them. It is important to remember that buying politicians does not necessarily get workers the laws and budgets that they want. But a well-organized union is a militant one and one that can mobilize quickly to take actions that force the bosses (and politicians) to bend.

Modern School
http://modeducation.blogspot.com/
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snot Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jan-23-11 03:00 PM
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1. If it's ok to ban the use of members’ dues for lobbying,
the use of proceeds from issuances of corporate stock should also be banned for lobbying.

Or aren't unions "people," too?
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Hannah Bell Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jan-24-11 05:09 AM
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2. is there anyone from alabama here? it's a right to work state, & as i understand it,
Edited on Mon Jan-24-11 05:18 AM by Hannah Bell
the union there is pretty much powerless -- they don't even have collective bargaining.

as i understand, this legislation means that teachers can't serve in the government -- that seems blatantly unconstitutional.

public employees in alabama CAN'T HAVE UNIONS by law.

there's an education association, but there's no obligation to be in it to get a job, or pay it dues, or anything.

and now it can't even collect dues via payroll deduction.

yet corporations are "persons" & their reps can serve, they can have PACS, etc.

this is crazy.
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